Voices of Veterans: SFC Larry “Scott” Teakell Shares His Story of Service in the United States Army
AUSTIN, Texas— Today, Texas Land Commissioner and Veterans Land Board (VLB) Chairwoman Dawn Buckingham, M.D., is proud to introduce the next installment of the series highlighting the VLB’s Voices of Veterans oral history program. This week, we highlight the service of Sergeant First Class Larry Scott Teakell who served in United States Army during the Iraq/Afghanistan War.
Born in Texas City, Texas in 1969, Teakell attended Waco High School and said he went to college “to be an artist […] I have an artistic mind and so I thought going to art school would be my career path.” While he graduated with a degree in Commercial Art and Advertising, he said it just wasn’t cutting it financially. Absorbed into the Punk Rock scene, Teakell said he was “a starving artist” who was “painting murals and doing t-shirts and artwork for bands.”
Following the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993, Teakell said he tried to join the Marines, and while he didn’t elaborate, he decided that it wasn’t for him and so the process “just stopped.” In 1994, he said, his brother was killed, calling it “a very tragic moment in his life” and, in a way, it created a moment of reflection.

“I had a daughter and an ex-wife already in 1994. I was struggling to pay bills and thought I would join the military for four years and then I’ll be able to pay child support, get out at four years and go back to college and get my bachelors degree and whatever,” he explained. “So, I joined the Army as a medic.”
Teakell said he was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri for his basic training in January 1995. He shared he was elevated to “a PFC (Private First Class) right off the bat” because as a Boy Scout, he had earned the Arrow of Light, which allowed him to jump three ranks as he started his military career.
Teakell said while Fort Leonard Wood wasn’t something he was expecting, or he’d experienced before, he leaned into to the Army lifestyle, adopted it as his own, and “swallowed it, hook, line and sinker.” After eight weeks of basic training, Teakell said he was sent to Fort Sam Houston where he received his EMT certification and where he “learned about combat trauma and combat medicine” before being sent to his first duty station in Germany.

Following his move to Germany, Teakell said he was sent to Bosnia in 1997 and that’s when he got his first medical trauma induction. He said, “I treated a guy with a head wound that was running from the Serbians, he was a Muslim. We were on an Observation Point (OP) between the Muslim sector and the Serbian villages to keep the peace, and he ran toward us […] he runs up to us, he’s bleeding, I yell at him and tell the interpreter to come over. I started cleaning him up and he had a corner piece of brick stuck in the back of his skull and his face was all cut up and his neck was all cut up.”
Teakell said he got him bandaged up and as he was finishing “the people chasing him started to circle around us and they had axes and pitchforks, and two-by-fours with nails […] they were just a big mob of people.” Teakell said he told the interpreter to tell them to step back and that he needed to care for this man but if the mob came in closer “I would have to shoot you.” Teakell said he was forced to pull out his gun and they started to retreat but that’s because reinforcements were arriving.
Teakell said he spent eight months in Bosnia before he returned to Germany for three years and then was faced with a “what’s next” for him moment. He said he returned to Sam Houston to get his LPN license so he could work a nurse in the civilian world before getting orders to go to Fort Lewis, Washington. Once there, he was required to work in area hospitals as an intern and make the rounds but realized halfway through, being a nurse wasn’t for him. He said, “I wanted to treat the trauma, stabilize the patient in combat and they live because you saved their lives.”

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